Archive for May, 2015

Culture Vulture/Photo Diary: an afternoon at MOMA

May 24, 2015

My friends Robert and Achim, artists who live in Berlin, visited New York for a week and we spent part of a Friday afternoon walking through the Museum of Modern Art. I was eager to check out the Yoko Ono retrospective, since she has been an art hero of mine since I first heard of her when she and John Lennon got together and brought politically active anti-war performance art to front pages and evening news all over the world. As a precocious 15-year-old experimental art maven, I eagerly bought her book Grapefruit when it became available and loved its impy mixture of poetry and conceptual art.

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It took a while but I eventually got my hands on a copy of John and Yoko’s Two Virgins album with the famous controversial naked pictures on the cover. The John Cage-like meanderings and Yoko’s shrill bleating were hard to love as “music,” but for a kid growing up on Air Force bases they were windows onto a wider, crazier, freer world. And I did sometimes enjoy putting a quarter in a jukebox, cuing up “Don’t Worry Kyoko” (the B-side of the Plastic Ono Band’s “Cold Turkey”), and walking out before her intense screaming filled the air. Art pranks are timeless. Ask Dada.

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The MOMA show gives museumgoers plenty to see and think about and participate in. You can perform the “Bag Piece” yourself, alone or with a friend. The conceptual pieces are as fresh and witty as ever — even if you’re only looking at framed index cards with a sentence or two typewritten on them, your mind fills up with the actions she invites you to imagine. The video of her performing “Cut Piece” is riveting, impressive, and unnerving all at once.

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I didn’t even notice the room devoted to “Touch Poem for a Group of People” until Robert pointed it out: a gray-carpeted room with a standing sign reading “touch each other.” This became the most fascinating (and sad) social experiment. Most people would peer in but be afraid to enter. Or maybe a group would walk in, jokingly poke one another in the arm with one forefinger, and leave. Robert and Achim and I decided to do a little massage, a little contact improv — passersby would peek in, see us, and walk away. Finally, a young  couple from Nova Scotia came in and we engaged them in conversation about the shyness and awkwardness of public touching, and we all held hands for a moment.

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At the moment MOMA is full of conceptual art — early drawings by British dandy pranksters Gilbert and George

5-22 gng cuntshit5-22 gng censoreda room full of Warhol’s Campbell Soup can paintings

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and a hodgepodge of stuff in “Scenes for a New Heritage: Contemporary Art from the Collection,” my favorite of which was “The Black Star,” a portfolio of digital prints by Seheh Shah, a Pakistani artist now living in Brooklyn.

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I also dug seeing a very large Jean-Michel Basquiat canvas I’d never seen before (Glenn) displayed in a hallway as well as the huge painting by Kerry James Marshall called Untitled (Club Scene) in the entrance hall.

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Good stuff online: Deborah Eisenberg on PEN America and Charlie Hebdo

May 19, 2015

I’ve only belatedly caught wind of the exchange of communications between PEN America’s Executive Director Suzanne Nossel and novelist Deborah Eisenberg about PEN America’s decision to bestow an award for courage in freedom on expression on the French magazine Charlie Hebdo at its annual literary gala May 6 at the Museum of Natural History. PEN America’s decision was highly controversial and caused a number of prominent writers to distance themselves from the event and from the organization, which in turn brought other writers to the defense. I have felt very uneasy about this particular honoring of Charlie Hebdo myself, for reasons I couldn’t put my finger on. Eisenberg, in her brilliance, nails it.

Much is made these days of exposing snarky exchanges, especially those not meant for public consumption. The exchange between Eisenberg and Nossel (pictured below) doesn’t fall into that category at all. Instead, these two women model thoughtful, respectful, extremely nuanced dialogue on a topic about which they fundamentally disagree. If you’ve ever wondered how to manage that trick, this document is worthy of study. Check it out and let me know what you think.

These letters (and others about the PEN America controversy) were posted on The Intercept, the website co-founded by the journalist Glenn Greenwald, whom Eisenberg correctly cites as a good example of someone who truly exercises courage in service of freedom of expression.

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Quote of the day: DEVICES

May 17, 2015

DEVICES

I was in the recording studio the other day. I’d hired five musicians. We were in the studio for seven or eight hours. One of the musicians was 100 percent committed, no interruptions. He will be hired again. By contrast the bassist stayed on his phone throughout the session, doing social media. He will only be hired again if I can’t find someone else.

–producer and trombonist Delfeayo Marsalis

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Photo diary: expedition to Williamsburg

May 17, 2015

Taking the L train from Manhattan and getting off at Bedford Avenue lands you right smack in the midst of trendy Williamsburg with all the artisanal/hipster cliches you care to load onto it. The L train wasn’t running, though, so arriving at Marcy Avenue via the M train exposed us to a whole other, funky, humble side of Williamsburg. The clumsy clutter of streets and highways. The wall murals. The rampant construction. The deadpan signage. We learned that Williamsburgh lost its “h” in 1852. And no trip to Williamsburg is complete without a pilgrimage to Rough Trade, one of the last great record stores in existence — we each walked away with a pile of CDs by artists we hadn’t heard of when we walked in the door.

(click photos to enlarge)

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Quote of the day: CHANGE

May 13, 2015

CHANGE

[Kenji] Yoshino, a leading progressive thinker about civil rights, is the Chief Justice Earl Warren professor of constitutional law at New York University Law School. The story of his title helps explain why he wrote this book [Speak Now: Marriage Equality on Trial]. When the law school’s dean offered him the chair, Yoshino explains, “Chief Justice” wasn’t part of its name. He declined it as a Japanese-American: Warren, as California’s attorney general during World War II, had approved the internment of Japanese-Americans. A few days later, the dean called again to point out that, as chief justice, Warren apologized for the internment, then to offer Yoshino the chair with the full title. “Wouldn’t it be great,” the dean asked, “if your chair embodied how much an individual can grow over a single lifetime?” Yoshino [pictured below] accepted the position.

–Lincoln Caplan, New York Times Book Review

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